week 7 wireless access points
Post on 13-Apr-2017
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Presentation Outline• What are wireless access points• How do wireless access points work- How are VLANs different- How to identify access points• How they are set up - Access placement and power- Hardware • Performance based on set up• Conclusion
What Wireless Access Points?Wireless access points (APs or WAPs) are special-purpose communication devices on wireless local area networks (WLANs). Access points act as a central transmitter and receiver of wireless radio signals
How do wireless Access point work?First of all let us look at how WLANs for example
are different from the other Area Network, also how wireless Access points come in to play with that technology. That will help us get a better understanding of Wireless access points set up and more.
How are WLANs Different?• They use specialized physical and data link
protocols• They integrate into existing networks through
access points which provide a bridging function• They let you stay connected as you roam from
one coverage area to another• They have unique security considerations • They have specific interoperability
requirements • They require different hardware • They offer performance that differs from wired
LANs.
How to identify Access Points Access points are small physical devices
closely resembling home broadband routers. Wireless routers used for home networking have these access points built into the hardware, and can work together with standalone AP units.
How they are set up• Wireless Access Points (APs) - a small
device that bridges wireless traffic to your network.
• Most access points bridge wireless LANs into Ethernet networks, but Token-Ring options are available as well.
Access Point Placement and Power• Typically – mounted at ceiling height.• Between 15 and 25 feet (4.5m to 8m)• The greater the height, the greater the
difficulty to get power to the unit. Solution: consider devices that can be powered using CAT5 Ethernet cable (CISCO Aironet 1200 Series).
• Access points have internal or external antennas
Hardware• PC Card, either with integral antenna or
with external antenna/RF module. • ISA Card with external antenna
connected by cable. • Handheld terminals • Access points
Performance based on setup• 802.11a offers speeds with a
theoretically maximum rate of 54Mbps in the 5 GHz band
• 802.11b offers speeds with a theoretically maximum rate of 11Mbps at in the 2.4 GHz spectrum band
• 802.11g is a new standard for data rates of up to a theoretical maximum of 54 Mbps at 2.4 GHz.
Connecting to the Wired LAN• Consider user mobility• If users move between subnets, there are
challenges to consider.• OSes like Windows XP and 2000, Linux
support DHCP to obtain the new IP address for the subnet. Certain applications such as VPN will fail.
• Solution: access points in a roaming area are on the same segment.
ConclusionWi-Fi access point provides a connection between the electrical data path formed by an Ethernet cable and the RF signal data path formed by the Wi-Fi radios. In essence, an access point is a translational bridge, converting the TCP/IP data packets from their 802.11 frame encapsulation format in the air to the 802.3 Ethernet frame format on the wired Ethernet network
Vendor Information• CISCO Systems Wireless
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/44/jump/wireless.shtml
• 3Com Wireless http://www.3com.com/products/en_US/prodlist.jsp?tab=cat&pathtype=purchase&cat=13&selcat=Wireless+Products
• Breeze Wireless Communications http://www.breezecom.com
• Lucent Technologies http://www.wavelan.com
• Symbol Technologies http://www.symbol.com
References• CISCO Packet Magazine, 2nd Quarter 2002
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/about/ac123/ac114/ac173/ac168/about_cisco_packet_issue_home.html
• 3Com University – Wireless LANs A Technology Overview www.3com.com/3comu
• National Institute of Standards and Technology Wireless Network Security http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/drafts/draft-sp800-48.pdf
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